Skip to main content
  • Breast Cancer
    Breast cancer is the most common cancer among women. Globally, breast cancer accounts for 23-24 per cent of all cancers in women. Most women develop breast cancer over the age of 40. In all new breast cancer cases, 5-7 per cent are young women between the ages of 20-39. It can occur in men, but these cases are very rare.   
Submitted by PatientsEngage on 26 September 2015

Can breast cancer be prevented?

The chance of developing breast cancer depends on genes, environment and lifestyle. Factors that increase one's chances are called risk factors, while those that decrease one's chances are termed protective factors. Here are some dos to improve your protective factors and don’ts to avoid risk factors:

  • Risk factors
    • Being overweight or obese
    • Smoking
    • Excessive alcohol intake
    • Aging
    • Peronal history of benign or malignant breat cancer
    • Family history of breast cancer
    • Dense breast tissue
    • Continual and prolonged estrogen production by the body
    • Taking hormone therapy for menopause
    • Radiation exposure
  • Protective factors
    • Less exposure to estrogen by ensuring early pregnancy and breast-feeding longer.
    • Maintaining a healthy weight and active lifestyle
    • Using estrogen hormone therapy post-hysterectomy, and taking selective estrogen receptor modulators or aromatase inhibitors.
    • Going for regular breast cancer screening mammograms. An annual mammogram is recommended for women over 40. For women aged 20-39, screening mammograms are not really helpful because of dense breast tissue. For this group of women, clinical breast examination by a doctor every two to three years is advised.
    • Women at high risk (family history, inherited abnormal genes) should get more frequent mammograms and be screened earlier.
    • Prophylactic mastectomy and ovarian ablation for high risk women
Changed
05/Jan/2019
Community
Condition

Stories

  • Stock pic of a rose in flames
    Why I Embrace Pain
    What does pain foretell? A reflective piece on what chronic pain means to triple negative cancer survivor Geetha Paniker that is beautiful and cathartic. It is one thing to feel empathy for others, but something totally different to be in pain. Each person's own pain is most difficult until one goes through chronic pain day in and day out or an illness that calls for sheer grit to go through it. Chronic pain is pain that continues for weeks, months and even years. The experience of acute pain…
  • Talking Candidly about my Cancer
    London based Parul Banka has published a book in which she openly narrates her encounter with breast cancer. During her journey, she learnt that talking about cancer in the open enables us to choose – awareness over ignorance, courage over fear and empathy over judgement. Here she validates her viewpoint. My name is Parul Banka. I was diagnosed with an aggressive grade III (the fastest growing type) breast cancer in September 2012. The entire drill of cancer treatment - chemotherapy, surgery…
  • How to Stay Healthy after Menopause
    Post-Menopause is tied to long-term health problems if wholesome food intake and regular physical activity is not practiced. Nutritionist Kohila Govindaraju shares tips on what to eat and importance of exercise. Menopause is a natural biological process. It is the time when a woman stops menstruating. The hormones estrogen and progesterone production will be low and the ovaries no longer produce eggs. In women, estrogen is mainly produced in the ovaries. It is also produced in fat cells and…
  • Love in the Times of Cancer
    Mukesh’s love for his college sweetheart, Shachi, remained resolute even after she was diagnosed with breast cancer. Here is a Valentine’s Day story to warm your heart. It was in 2001 that I first saw her. She walked into my tutorial class and it was love at first sight for me. I know most people say love at first sight is just an infatuation, but I felt an instant romantic attraction for her. It could be an infatuation, or young adult crush…I don’t know. All I knew was that my head was…
  • I decided to win this battle against Breast Cancer!
    Mamta Goenka suffered bilateral breast cancer and naturally went through the entire gamut of treatment along with emotional turmoil and pangs of mortification. But she decided to challenge her cancer and the hair loss with her head held high. She emerged victorious and turned crusader and lymphedema management guru. Please tell us a bit about your condition : I suffered from bilateral breast cancer! When were you diagnosed? I was diagnosed with right breast cancer in 1998 and then with the left…
  • DSCN2647
    Is Breast Cancer Infectious?
    Rita Banik, breast cancer survivor and founder of RACE to Rein-in-Cancer, had to face this and many painful falsities and misrepresentation during her treatment. She shares some of the hurtful things that people say.  This Breast Cancer Awareness Month, she emphasizes the need to increase understanding about cancer in society and importance of early detection. Breast Cancer (BC) has become a dinner talk disease.  It has been predicted that if measures are not taken right away then by…
  • Effect of Smoking on Fertility: Everything you wanted to know
    Smoking is known to cause and effect many systems in our body with adverse consequences, but how does it affect fertility in women? Dr Sarita Bhalerao, an established OBGYN from Mumbai helps us understand the subject in more detail. 1. Is smoking a growing concern for infertility in women? Smoking and consumption of tobacco have in general been a growing concern for women all over the world. It is a major health problem affecting developing countries especially amongst the youth…
  • 81z5QcBgtfL
    Cancer made me love myself with all the passion in my soul
    Moyna Sen, our editor reviews cancer survivor Geetha Paniker's book "When I Fell in Love with Life". Even as you read this beautiful review, you will feel emotional and want to read the book.    Geetha Paniker does not come across as a Cancer survivor. She, on the other hand, seems like someone who has not only conquered the dreaded ailment, but has, also, in the process, learnt the prized art of celebrating life. Even though she calls Cancer the Emperor of Maladies as…
  • I can honestly say cancer changed my life
    By Geetha Paniker, a survivor of triple negative cancer with double mastectomy reflects on and celebrates her 5 year Cancer Anniversary. A believer of being positive against all odds who pens, all that the mind can reason with the heart.  A teacher, turned home maker, she loves reading, writing and handicrafts.  Cancer-Anniversary. An anniversary is a day to celebrate an occasion or an event or something significant in life. It is a milestone of something very precious…
  • Life after cancer
    By Geetha Paniker, a survivor of triple negative cancer with double mastectomy. A believer of being positive against all odds who pens, all that the mind can reason with the heart. A teacher, turned home maker, she loves reading, writing and handicrafts.  Life after cancer teaches us to look at how we want to live in the future. Some may want to do things they’ve often thought about but never got a chance to do in the rat race of life, perhaps visit places they’ve…